Publications by authors named "Lisa Spellman"

American Indians' cancer disparities vary by region, signifying the importance of understanding community-specific levels of readiness to address cancer. Twenty-four key respondents from an urban American Indian community in the Great Plains, community leaders ( = 8), educators ( = 8), and students ( = 8), were interviewed following the Community Readiness Model. Using framework analysis, we qualitatively examined data related to efforts and resources in interview transcripts.

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American Indians residing in the Northern Plains region of the Indian Health Service experience some of the most severe cancer-related health disparities. We investigated ways in which the community climate among an American Indian population in an urban community in the Northern Plains region influences community readiness to address cancer. A Community Readiness Assessment, following the Community Readiness Model, conducted semi-structured interviews with eight educators, eight students, and eight community leaders from the American Indian community in Omaha's urban American Indian population and established the Northern Plains region community at a low level of readiness to address cancer.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the safety of non-insertive acupuncture (NIA) in 54 newborns with Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS) in an inner-city hospital setting.
  • The retrospective chart review found that most infants were non-Hispanic White, often on Medicaid, and showed improvements in sleep and feeding after NIA treatments, with no recorded adverse events.
  • The findings suggest NIA may be beneficial as a supportive treatment for NAS, but further research is needed to confirm its effectiveness and safety.
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Background: Acupuncture use remains common in the United States, yet little is known of its utilization by minority and underserved populations. Herein we report first visit data capturing patient profiles, types of conditions presented, and self-reports of their experience and satisfaction with acupuncture accessed at a free care clinic with in a large urban safety net hospital.

Methods: Sixty-one adult, English-speaking acupuncture patients were given a 20 min survey after their first visit to a free care acupuncture clinic.

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Ellipsis refers to an element that is absent from the input but whose meaning can nonetheless be recovered from context. In this cross-modal priming study, we examined the online processing of Sluicing, an ellipsis whose antecedent is an entire clause: The handyman threw a book to the programmer but I don't know which book the handyman threw to the programmer(ellipsis.) To understand such an elliptical construction, the listener arguably must 'fill in' the missing material ("the handyman threw___ to the programmer") based on that which occurs in the antecedent clause.

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Objective: To describe the establishment and integration of a free-care acupuncture clinic within an urban hospital with an underserved minority adolescent population and to study patient utilization.

Background: Surveys often show low use of acupuncture among underserved non-Asian minority populations. We hypothesized that it would be possible to integrate an acupuncture clinic into a biomedical setting.

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